Spetisbury |
|
Spetisbury is a village on the banks of the River Stour,
three miles South-east of Blandford Forum and eleven miles North-west of Poole.
The 1086 Domesday Book talks of two manors here, Spetisbury and Crawford Magna,
while in medieval times there was a third manor between the two known as Middlestreet.
Modern-day Spetisbury is an amalgamation of all three, ownership of the manors
having become concentrated in the hands of a single landowner, Francis Fane, in
the 18th century. The name of the village is delightfully Anglo-Saxon, meaning
'the ancient earthwork frequented by the green woodpecker' from the Old English
'speht' or 'speoht' for woodpecker and 'burgh' or 'byrig' for earthwork, referring
to the Iron Age fort above the village known variously as Spetisbury Rings or
Crawford Castle. In ancient times this fort was the scene of a great battle between
the Britons and the Romans, as the Durotriges valiantly but vainly tried to stop
the all-conquering legionaries
|
There has been a Church in Spetisbury since Norman times, although
the current church of St John the Baptist is an 1858 Wyatt rebuild largely funded by
Rev. Henry Vizard, with only the tower, columned arcade and some of the window frames
remaining from the medieval church. There are nevertheless many points of interest,
including the medieval font, the Tudor tomb of one-time lord of the manor Sir John Boyer,
the Jacobean pulpit and the bell-ringer's ditty dating from 1818. The North Aisle window
depicts an odd cast of characters: the hermit Robert of Knaresborough, sainted for his
lifestyle of extreme deprivation, King Charles I, portrayed as a martyr, and finally
Sir Thomas More, executed by Henry VIII for a matter of conscience, but not averse to
burning protestants whose religious beliefs did not accord with his own. It is dedicated
to former incumbent Rev. Baskett, even though he was never really active in the parish,
hiring a curate to do the job after having been controversially appointed to the living
at age 80. Spetisbury's longest serving rector, Rev. Thomas Rackett, had had the same
idea, leaving the curate to it while he pursued his many and varied interests in London,
consorting with the likes of actor David Garrick, playwright Richard Brinsley Sheridan
and artist George Romney. Although Dorset historian, Rev. John Hutchins always defended
him, even Rackett's distinctive tetrahedron tombstone alludes to his neglect of parochial
duties, which was held by his bishop to be the cause of defections from amongst his
congregation to non-conformism
|
|
You can contact Mark by clicking on the link above which should generate a correctly addressed email |
Census | 1841 Census [Keith Searson] |
Parish Registers |
Baptisms 1813-1837 [Nigel Kennard] Marriages 1706-1845 [Kim Parker] Burials 1813-1904 [Jan Hibberd] |
Trade & Postal Directories | Extract from the 1865 & 1880 Directory [Lynda Small] |
Other Records | List of
Wills proved at Blandford [Lynda Small] Index of Wills for Spetisbury Residents [Kim Parker] Militia List 1787 [Caryl Parsons] Extracts from Hutchins [Dorinda Miles] Spetisbury Web Site - contains excellent pictures and a brief but informative history of the village and church Bellringer's Ditty 1818 [Kim Parker] Spetisbury Parish Rectors [Kim Parker] |
Photographs | Churchyard Memorial Stones including Inscriptions [Jan Hibberd] |
Monumental Inscriptions |
St John the Baptist Monumental
Inscriptions Index [Jan Hibberd] Spetisbury Roll of Honour [Kim Parker] |
View Larger Map |
|
Records held at the Dorset History Centre [Ref PE-SPY] |
Registers Christenings 1705-1991. Marriages 1706-1995. Burials 1705-1904. Banns 1877-1981 |
Registration District
(for the purpose of civil registration births, marriages & deaths) |
1 Jul 1837-30 Jun 1956: Blandford 1 Jul 1956-31 Mar 1973: Poole 1 Apr 1974-17 Oct 2005: North Dorset |
|
|
|
Visitors to Dorset OPC
Copyright (c) 2024 Dorset OPC Project